Welcome to Art Room 104! Well, I no longer teach in room 104...it's now room 309, but the heart is still there! I have now transitioned into teaching 7th-12th grades, and my focus is now moving towards Choice Based Learning in the art room. Join me on my journey as I enter new territory, experiment, and share how I fit it all into the realm of Common Core!

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Art Club Fundraising

Now that we are done with our mural, it's time for my art club to start working on making some money for their field trip at the end of the year! When I was growing up, I was fascinated with boondoggle. Don't know what boondoggle is? How about plastic lacing...or gimp? My dad and my grandma taught me how to make key chains and I used to make them and sell them on the bus when I was in elementary school!

When I started my art club, I knew that the previous teacher used to do bake sales to raise money for a field trip. To me, that's not very artistic (especially since parents made the stuff to sell!), plus it's so hard to have a bake sale in NYS now because of health code stuff. If it's not prepared in a school kitchen, you can't sell it anymore! We charge anywhere from 25 cents (for the short, zipper pulls...the Kinders like buying these and can afford them) to $2.50 for the bracelets below.

If you don't know about boondoggle, or you need brushing up on it, check out the Boondoggle Man website. His site is AWESOME. He has videos as well as step-by-step pictures for just about EVERY boondoggle stitch possible.

Here are the items I'll be teaching my kids how to make on Wednesday when we get back from break. They've been hounding me to learn how to do this, but it takes a bit to teach these and we needed to finish the mural.

The bottle tab bracelets are really popular bracelets. They're so fun to make because you can change up the color of the laces and/or the color of the tabs if you have enough! One of the teachers at my school brought me TWO gallon coffee cans filled with tabs of all sorts of different colors!

There are lots of different ways to make these bracelets. I based my pattern off of a bracelet my brother got from a friend. A lot of times people make a single layer of tabs, but these can actually hurt to wear because the rough side of the tab is against the skin. I use two layers of tabs, back to back and off set just a bit. When school starts back up and I have access to my tabs and boondoggle, I post a tutorial!

These are the other types of bracelets that are pretty popular. These cuff bracelets use a thin piece of metal, usually aluminum strips. You can find lots of tutorials on how to make these in boondoggle books from Michaels or JoAnns (that's where I got all these patterns from).

For my last share of this post, I will share my boondoggle cheat sheet that I have made to send home with my students. Once they get the basic stitches down (box, brick wall, spiral and zig zag), I send them home with sheet. These all came from the Boondoggle Man website. I simplified the directions and added a picture so that the students can do the fancy key chains at home without me. The fishy/ribbon is a very popular key chain. Last year we made about 30 of these, charged $2 for them and then donated the money to one of the caner walks that a teacher was participating in.

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About Me

I have now entered my 7th year of teaching in a very small, extremely rural district. I've been an elementary art teacher for 3 years, a K-12 teacher for 3 years, and now, I am a 7th-12th grade high school art teacher...my dream grade levels! I am also a Jamberry consultant, and while I don't find much time to make my own art anymore, I love to design my own jams!